Burton Mail

Additional flood defence work is complete

£30M SCHEME NOW LEAVES A CONTINUOUS LINE OF PROTECTION THROUGH TOWN

- By MAIL REPORTER editorial@burtonmail.co.uk

FLOOD defence work to alleviate issues around part of the A38 around Burton have been completed.

The additional flood defence work has been done near the A38 at Branston, and comes on top of an earlier project to bolster flood defences through Burton.

The work, which started after the completion of the Burton project last summer, reduces flood risk to some 397 properties, including 18 affected by the flood of February 2020.

The whole investment in Burton, including £2 million from the National Highways Designated Funds programme, has cost more than £30 million, and reduces the risk of flooding to more than 4,600 homes and 1,000 businesses.

The A38 at Branston and adjacent properties have experience­d flooding on several occasions since 2000. An investigat­ion revealed that when the level of the River Trent was high, water got into Severn Trent Water’s foul sewerage system, highway drains and through low ground and eventually flooded properties and the highway.

Through the constructi­on of sheet piled walls, embankment­s and nonreturn valves, water will now be contained in Tatenhill Brook when the River Trent is high.

Will Groves, senior flood risk adviser for the Environmen­t Agency, said: “This latest completed work has been funded from the £30 million set aside to improve the flood defences in the Burton-upon-trent area.

“We want to thank all members of the local community for their understand­ing and patience while these works have taken place.

“Our team first started constructi­on work in Burton in 2019 and the improved flood defences have already successful­ly protected properties, which otherwise would have been affected by floods, in the last two years.

“While these defences should provide reassuranc­e to communitie­s and businesses, no one should have a false sense of security. We strongly urge people to sign up for flood warnings and regularly check flood risk via our website.”

Ian Doust, National Highways programme developmen­t manager, said: “We are committed to reducing flooding on our roads and also minimising flood risks to the communitie­s who live alongside them.

“In response to the changing climate, we are investing in schemes such as this which will improve the flood resilience of our network and reduce the flooding risk to our neighbours. It is extremely rewarding to see the completion of this scheme which will not only protect our roads and people living alongside them for generation­s to come, but in the future will also enhance the waterside habitats enabling wildlife to thrive.”

The original project started in June 2019 in Blackpool Street.

Workers then moved on to improve defences near Paget High School, Lansdowne Road, Burton Library, off High Street, before moving to Meadow Lane, Stretton, in autumn last year.

Much of the work has taken place undergroun­d where heavy duty metal sheet pile walls were added along the banks of the Trent and then covered over with huge amounts of soil.

Burton is protected from flooding by approximat­ely 9km of flood defence walls and embankment­s.

These form a continuous line of protection stretching from the Riverside Inn at Branston to Clay Mills in Stretton, which have successful­ly protected the town from flooding from very high river levels.

 ?? GOOGLE ?? Flood defences in Burton, and the A38 between Branston Water Park and the River Trent, above
GOOGLE Flood defences in Burton, and the A38 between Branston Water Park and the River Trent, above

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